Blossoms are found from spring through to autumn, depending on the climate.

Not sure about your local supplier, but growing them is so easy... infact it is using them up in time that can be the problem! You may find yourself giving heaps of zucchinis away to anyone who looks even vaguely in your direction on the street....

I would say that the pepperyness would have been the filling. On their own they are more melting and soft and zucchini-y.

You can fill them with just about anything. Cheese, Breadcrumbs and anchovies, herbs, minced meat or fish (precooked), pretty much anything that will cook quickly and can be made to a "stuffing" type consistency.

Are you going to bake them, or fry them? Both are delicious, but I love the light - sort of tempura style - batter that you get sometimes on the blossoms. Crispy on the outside and melting on the inside. YUM!_________________If you cannot feel your arteries hardening, eat more cheese. If you can, drink more red wine. Diet is just "die" with a "t" on the end. Exercise is walking into the kitchen.

As Debbie says, they are really easy to grow. I have really limited space but this year I am trying some round ones -- like the ones featured in one of Clotilde's recipes. I found the seeds at seedsofchange.com -- the only place I've seen that type.

The first time I had them was in LA from a farmer's market, but I was just visiting so I don't know where the market was. Sorry

Have you tried growing this kind of zucchini in a pot? If yes, how deep and how wide was it? Did you have to create some kind of trellis for it? I've never done vegetables in containers before, aside from the few radishes I grew in mini milk cartons in the 3rd grade. Thanks for the info and the link!_________________"Help! Help! I'm being repressed!" --- Monty Python and the Holy Grail

Does anyone have a good recipe for Zucchini flowers? I always see them stuffed with goat cheese, but to me this isn't such a great pairing as the goat cheese dominates the flavors. I would love try something different.

You are definitely supposed to be able to grow zukes in containers. Some are big and bushy but there are vining varieties that you could trellis (I think cocozelle is one). I'll look up recommended container size when I get home. I think Debbie sounds much more knowledgeable about gardening than I, but my 2 cents is that I prefer terracotta. I think it does dry out faster but I think it lets the soil "breathe".

Growing zucchinis is easy as. The happier your plants are, the more flowers they will yield. Pick the ones without a littlle zucchini attached if you want zucchini, and pick all of them if it doesn't matter to you. There are two types available here. A trailing one and a "bushier" variety. They will eventually fill whatever pot you put them in and if the trailing type, will wind all along a good sized trellis or length of fence. Depending on where you live, you should have then started in a windowsill by now.

I think the peppery bite was due to the filling. The flowers are rather mild.

I stuff zucchini flowers with a ricotta filling (ricotta, egg, herbs, breadcrumbs and parmigano) and dip in batter. But a traditional way to prepare them is also as part of a fritter. I have a recipe for the batter somewhere. Typical batter with eggs, herbs, sometimes a hot pepper and, of course, cheese.. parmigiano reggiano is good but go with grana padano or a blend of the two (more economical). Other hard grating cheeses (pecorino) work well too. Do not use overly bitter, metallic, butyric, domestic parmesan, tastes terrible.

They are also a great add to a fritatta.

Don't overstuff. Cleaning filling out of the frypan is no fun.

And (words of wisdom from Ma) pick them in the morning when they are open and you can see any bugs. Easier to clean and trim and saves you from surprise extra protein. Don't trim until ready to use, they bruise easily. And let the zucchini get no bigger than a small cucumber. More tender and tasty. Good for grilling too. Larger ones can be used for breads and the like.

Hi Gisele,
Yes, they are.. Moore Wilson's in Wellington had them for $3 a pre-packed flower I don't remember if there was one or two per bag.. That's just wrong.
Depending on where you live (save for the far south - my beloved Dunedin), and with a little well-vented hot house, you could easily have them for a good portion of the year without the exorberant expense.
The whole reason i fiori were eaten in Southern Italy was because they were plentiful (read:cheap). If they were $3 each (I can hear Ma now - but I'll be polite) they would have eaten something else.
They are good stuffed but there is nothing like the fritters, called 'patae' (also patealli) in dialect, with a glass of red wine as an antipasti or anytime._________________Vorrei quello che stanno mangiando loro.

One of my most memorable evenings in Napoli last year was walking the streets with my husband, eating a bag full of freshly battered and fried goodies, sprinkled with some good coarse salt. Included in the aforementioned were the most mouthwatering fried zucchini blossoms, which I had never eaten before! The memory of that dinner (washed down with beer...) has inspired our tradition of deep- fry fridays at home. Interestingly, the blossoms are the one thing I haven't tried to make, since I haven't seen them at the supermarket yet. I'm assuming they show up in the late spring or early summer here (Toronto). Other fattening delights we do whip up include potato croquette (some filled with ricotta), and panelle (Sicilian fritters made with chickpea flour). Good luck in your quest!

I do have a recipe for the fritters. There are two "versions" depending if you want to add zucchini or not.
The first I just dip individual flowers into the batter and fry and the second incorporates some flowers and coarsely grated (or thinly sliced) young zucchini. Alternatively a light tempura style batter is nice for the stuffed flowers. Cornflower makes a crisp coating.
I'll post them in the recipes later on today.
And they are fantastic with beer! KristinaMadonia, do you have a favourite? Nastro Azzuro, Peroni, Moretti.. the primary labels are all similar but there are some different brews emerging.
Even though wine is so associated with Italy, beer is surprisingly often the beverage of choice, especially among the younger generation. Italian beer is generally light and refreshing and imports are very popular too.
I recall alot of beer on pizza night at an Aunts house in Polistena as well _________________Vorrei quello che stanno mangiando loro.